Showing posts with label cycling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cycling. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2018

Back In The Saddle: A Quick Bicycle Trip Around Bali

Lipah, May 1, 2018

Dozens of sails along the RollerCoastal
I got back to Bali about ten days before Terri at the beginning of April, and used some of that time to put right something that has been bothering me for months.  I hadn't gone on a bicycle trip in over two years, the longest such gap since 1994-97.  Terri and I rode our bicycles up the Carretera Austral in Chile, and around Paraguay, in 2015-16, and since then I have done lots of travel, but none of it on my trusty Rocky Mountain.  I decided that I should do a short jaunt around the eastern part of the island of Bali, and quickly charted out a 4-day itinerary to hit a few of the highlights that I had so far missed.  On April 8th I loaded up my bicycle very lightly (just two rear panniers, as I was going to be sleeping indoors every night and eating in restaurants) and set off to explore.


Eye candy along the RollerCoastal
Day 1:  April 8.  Lipah-Peneloka          91 km, 2660 vertical metres

The coast east of Lipah is very pretty indeed!
The first day was the hardest ride of the entire trip, with some 2660 vertical metres of climbing in some pretty intense heat.  I started off by riding the RollerCoastal, the back road to Amlapura, the biggest town in Karangasem Regency (in which Lipah is located).  I often ride part of this road as a fun morning outing, but I had never cycled all the way to Amlapura.  My nickname for the route tells you what you need to know about it:  lots of short, steep ups and downs.  The road climbs up and down over a series of sharp ridges coming down from the caldera of the extinct volcano that rises just behind Lipah.  Lempuyang and Seraya are the two highest surviving bits of a mountain that blasted itself to pieces sometime in the dim prehistoric past, but looking on a map you can see that there is a clear outline of what was once a much broader, higher volcanic cone.  It was a hot, challenging ride, with lots of it ridden in my lowest gear.  About two thirds of the way to Amlapura, the road finally became gentler, with better pavement and kinder grades.  It felt amazing to be back in the saddle, headed out for more than a couple of hours of riding.  I had missed the sensation of freedom and exploration that a bicycle tour always brings me.  The views along the RollerCoastal are sensational, with every headland bringing another vista of a black sand beach crowded with fishing boats, with the shimmering azure of the Bali Sea studded with sails beyond.  This stretch of coast has escaped tourist development, and the villages are devoted to fishing as they have been for generations.

Gunung Agung seen from Amlapura
After two and a half hours of tough riding, I got to the big city and had lunch in KFC so that I could use their free wi-fi; my SIM card had been locked by the government, and I was hoping to get it unlocked at the Telkomsel office in town, but I had forgotten that it was Sunday, and the office was closed.  I sat in the air conditioned restaurant, loaded up a Google Map route onto my phone and then set off northwest into the highlands under the fierce midday sun.

Lovely rice terraces on the way to Besakih
I had a wonderful view of Gunung Agung as I rode out of Amlapura.  The volcano has returned to its usual peaceful state after a few months of intense rumbling, shaking and puffing from September to January, and it looked magnificent in an almost cloudless sky.  I rode along the main road for a while until Google Maps directed me off onto a side road.  I am usually a huge fan of side roads, but in this case the side road was a tiny bit shorter by being a lot steeper, with a series of steep ups and downs through the spectacular rice terraces for which Bali is famous.  It was gruelling work, and when I finally re-emerged onto the busy main road, it was actually a bit of a relief to have gentler grades, despite the incessant noise of motorcycles and trucks and the standard Balinese maniacal driving style.  The road led around the western slopes of Gunung Agung, past the turnoff to Besakih, the main temple of the mountain and the starting point for climbing Agung.  I was definitely feeling all that vertical climbing when I finally reached the rim of the Gunung Batur caldera.  It was disappointing to discover that this was not the end of the uphill, as the road undulated, more up than down, for the next several kilometres until I got to the junction at Peneloka.  There a road plunges down to the shores of the lake, Danau Batur.  I was less than keen to lose all that hard-earned elevation, so I took a room at a hotel perched on the caldera rim, hoping for a fabulous sunrise view the next morning; it was already dusk by the time I climbed off my bicycle, legs weary but otherwise feeling pretty good.  A much-needed shower, a big meal and an early night completed the first day.

Day 2:  April 9.  Peneloka-Candikuning          65 km,  1510 vertical metres

Dawn over Batur
I was up in the predawn the next morning after the soul-satisfying deep sleep that comes after a big day of riding.  There was a pretty dawn light show in the eastern sky, but thin cloud led to rather flat, disappointing light on the new cinder cone of Gunung Batur.  I could see the headlights and camera flashes of hordes of trekkers near the summit; Batur is a popular climb for tourists, and has been sewn up by a local guiding association who make it remarkably expensive for a relatively short walk.  I felt no real need to climb the volcano, as there was plenty of exercise ahead, despite it being a significantly shorter and less vertical leg than the day before.  I took a few photos, stretched and juggled a bit to wake up, then climbed onto my bicycle.
Early morning light on Gunung Batur

Festival time
The road continued to climb, albeit fitfully, as I circled the caldera clockwise.  There was a lot of traffic on the road, as this is part of the main north-south route from Denpasar to Singaraja.  Luckily there was a festival at one of the temples along the route which closed the road to all but motorcycles and one lucky cyclists.  After 11 kilometres and some 350 metres of ascent, to just over 1600 metres above sea level, I was happy to turn away from the main road and start descending to the south.  I could see the mountains enclosing the day's destination, another volcanic lake called Danau Bratan, to the west, seemingly close enough to touch, but the jagged gash of a deep gorge means that there is no direct road between the two lakes.  Instead my route led me 25 km south to a crossing point, then another 25 km north again.  The southward leg was all downhill, making for an easy morning.  The scenery was appealing too, across volcanic highlands devoted to plantations of oranges, coffee and marigolds.  I had not breakfasted before leaving, so in the small village of Catur I stopped for a big helping of gado gado, one of my favourite Indonesian dishes, at a small roadside stall.  The woman running the place spoke exceptionally good English, and it turned out that she had worked abroad for over a decade in Turkey, the Maldives and Dubai.  She worked first as a masseuse, then as a massage instructor and supervisor, and had only returned to her native village to care for her aged parents a few months previously.  We chatted about travel, and it turned out that she, like me, is a big fan of Kyrgyzstan.  These sorts of serendipitous encounters with people along the way are one of my favourite aspects of bicycle journeys, and I pedalled off with my belly full and feeling good about being back cycle touring.

A well-travelled restaurateur in Catur

Volcanoes lining up from near Plaga
I lost altitude increasingly rapidly, eventually crossing one deep canyon and climbing into the small town of Plaga before dropping again to the main crossing over the Ayung River.  I was now less than 30 km north of Ubud and the landscape, all rice terraces and pretty ridge-top temples and villages, was very similar to the magical countryside that made Ubud famous (too famous, to judge by the appalling traffic that was choking the place the last time I visited, last September).  Now all that remained was 900 metres of regaining lost elevation.  It was a steep, hard grunt, but much of the way I was on a small side road without any traffic at all, so I had time to look around and appreciate my surroundings.  It was a bit grey and hazy, not so good for views but a welcome relief for a cyclist sweating his way uphill.  About 6 km short of my destination, I joined another major north-south road and resigned myself to more heavy traffic and obnoxious driving behaviour.  I finally got to the village of Candikuning around 1:30, found a cheap hotel, showered and then set off in search of sustenance, both physical and intellectual.
Highland plantations

Marigolds grown in the highlands
The former came in the form of mujair, the fish that is raised in fish farms in both Danau Bratan and Danau Batur; it was pleasant, but the sweet soy-based sauce was a bit strange.  I then wandered up the road to the Bali Botanical Gardens where I hoped to do some birdwatching.  I had read several accounts of birdwatchers who had seen a couple dozen species of highland birds in an afternoon there, but I was either incompetent or unlucky, or both.  I could hear birds calling high overhead in tall trees, but peer as I might through my binoculars, I couldn't spot anything.  It was a complete strikeout in terms of new species; at least I had a pleasant stroll through the gardens.  After a big dinner of nasi goreng, I was in bed early, feeling a bit tired.
Near Danau Bratan

Day 3:  April 10, Candikuning to Lovina        33 km  330 vertical metres

It was a good thing that I was in bed early, as I had not paid enough attention to the religious makeup of Candikuning.  Bali is mostly Hindu, but there are pockets of Muslims here and there, and Candikuning was almost exclusively Muslim.  I was sleeping with my earplugs in (Bali's obsession with roosters, along with its packs of feral dogs, make for noisy nights), but they were no match for the high-decibel call to prayer that shook my hotel at 4:30 am.  I eventually fell asleep again, but I was not a well-rested little cyclist when I crawled out of bed.

Overlooking Danau Buyan
The day's riding was amazingly short and easy.  I rode out of town along the shore of Lake Bratan, then along a level valley leading to two more lakes, Buyan and Tamblingan; all three are nestled under the caldera wall of another extinct volcano.  At Buyan the road climbed steeply up to the rim of the caldera and then continued fairly level, with expansive views of the lakes to the left and the ocean to the right.  I felt suspended in mid-air and it made for wonderful cycling, especially when the main torrent of traffic disappeared downhill towards Singaraja.  Not long afterwards I followed Google Maps down a very steep route to the tourist hotspot of Lovina Beach.  I had 1500 metres to lose over 15 km, an average gradient of 10%, but the first half was surprisingly level.  The second half, however, was precipitous, and my forearms were starting to cramp by the time I got to the bottom.  It was very pretty and there was next to no traffic, and I really enjoyed being so far off the beaten track.  At the bottom I was able to boil water from my bottles on my brake rotors; all that gravitational potential energy that I had gained the day before was converted into heat, a fact that pleased my physics-teaching brain.

I had stayed in Lovina one night back in November during a quick diving trip along the north coast, and I had been surprised at how tatty the village is.  I knew that lots of expats and retirees live in Lovina, and I was hard-put to figure out where.  This trip revealed another side of Lovina in the hills above the coast, where genteel villas have been constructed to catch the mountain breezes.  I stayed closer to the coast, in the cheapest hotel so far; 150,000 rupiah (about US$ 12) bought me a spacious room in a complex with a swimming pool and pleasant gardens.  I went out for a sizeable lunch, then ended up spending much of the afternoon catching up on my beauty sleep, undisturbed by any muezzins.  I went out for dinner that evening overlooking Lovina's rather underwhelming beach and listened to quite a good cover band before retiring to my room.
Danau Buyan






Day Four:  April 11, Lovina to Lipah         90 km, 740 vertical metres

The last day of the trip was a bit of an anticlimax.  After the mountains, climbs, descents and new scenery of the first three days, the final stage was a fairly flat, uneventful trundle along a road that I had travelled twice before in each direction on visa runs (Singaraja is the nearest visa extension office to Lipah).   I stopped in Singaraja and got my SIM card issue resolved, a process that took almost an hour as I was behind a line of Chinese visitors who had also been stymied by the government's obsession with having all SIM cards registered.  After Singaraja I was able to ride fast enough to generate some wind cooling in the heat of the day, and I made good time all the way to Tulamben, site of the USAT Liberty wreck and many more less well-known muck-diving sites that Terri and I have visited many times.  From there the road got a bit hillier, but I was still back in Lipah by 2:30, having taken less than four hours from Singaraja.  I was hungry and a bit sunburnt, but elated at having seen a few more corners of Bali by bicycle.  I can't wait to do more cycle touring (probably just weekend jaunts) when I move to Tbilisi in August!

















Thursday, October 22, 2015

Shivering My Way Across Finland and Norway (July-August 2015)

October 22, 2015

The cycling half of my Nordic peregrinations began on July 20, 2015 when I tumbled off a very comfortable sleeper train from Helsinki to Rovaniemi.  Rovaniemi is the biggest city in Finnish Lappland and the end of the line for the passenger train.  I rode into town and waited for the tourist information office to open since I needed to figure out where to replace the camping gear that had just been stolen in Helsinki.  I also needed to make a police report of the theft in the hope (which ultimately proved futile) of getting my travel insurance to pay up.  The tourist info folks sent me around to several camping gear stores that had an absolutely underwhelming selection of tents, sleeping bags, sleeping mats and hiking backpacks.  I eventually decided to buy cheap stuff that would last for three weeks and then buy better gear when I got back to Canada.  It took me until about 2:30 to to deal with the very professional police and to buy what I needed, with the final bill coming to less than 220 euros for a functional but small backpack, a functional but very heavy tent, a heavy and not very warm sleeping bag and a fairly terrible sleeping mattress.  I was surprised at the lack of quality gear, given Rovaniemi’s reputation as the centre of outdoor adventure activities for Finnish Lappland. 

Sadly, all the shopping left me with not enough time to visit the official Santa Claus village, one of the biggest tourist attractions in town.  Rovaniemi is located right on the Arctic Circle, and has lots of reindeer around, so I guess it’s as good a spot as any for Santa to set up shop.  Leaving at 3 pm, I was happy that I had essentially 24 hours of daylight so that I could ride as late in the evening as I wanted.  That first day I rode steadily north and then west until 9 pm through recurrent drizzle and cold.  The scenery was gently undulating, with birch forests and stands of pine trees, neither of them terribly high, surrounding a series of small lakes.  It reminded me of the scenery around Thompson, Manitoba, where I once spent a month planting trees.  From time to time I came across reindeer beside the road, although I wasn’t fast enough to draw my camera before they bolted for the woods.  It was cold and bleak and hard to motivate myself to ride, and I had difficulty finding a good spot to put up my tent, finally finding a clearing in the woods after 84 km.

Nice river junction on day two, on the Swedish border
Reindeer
I slept solidly for 10 hours, as my body was a bit unused to cycling after a couple of weeks off the bike.  I awoke to even colder weather, with the maximum temperature for the day not getting above 11 degrees and little sunshine to warm me up.  I rolled 20 kilometres westward into the junction town of Pello before a futile 12-km round trip expedition to the police station to pick up a copy of my police report; the station wasn’t open that afternoon turning more due north along the river that forms the border between Finland and Sweden.  I kept rolling north through dreary weather until finally, around 4 pm, I found a beautiful spot overlooking the junction of two big rivers, the Tornealven and the Muoninjoki, and shivered my way through a picnic lunch.  The landscape reminded me a great deal of the Kaministiquia River outside Thunder Bay.  According to a fisherman I met there, this river provides some of the finest fly fishing in Finland, with 30 kg salmon, great trout and tasty Arctic char.  Sure enough, from this point north I saw a lot of fishermen in boats out on the water.  At the 120-km mark for the day, I contemplated camping in a roadside picnic area but was put off by the number of people who had used it as an outdoor latrine.  Instead I took a side road around a lake and found a secluded clearing in the forest to put up my tent, cook my pasta and fall asleep, tired and sore and cold.

July 22nd, my third day on my slog through Finnish Lappland, was another 120 km day.  I awoke in the night to recurring heavy rain, and the morning was cold, wet and very grey.  It was a bleak 60 km to the city of Muonio, with my feet getting so cold in the biting headwind cutting through my sandals that I lost all feeling under my right foot.  It definitely wasn’t a fun day in the saddle, so when I found a roadside truck stop serving reindeer burger, I lingered indoors, reluctant to leave the warmth.  I set off again at 4 and was rewarded by the headwind shifting into a tailwind and the sun finally reappearing. 
Looking like a real bike vacation!
My pretty campsite at the end of day three
I suddenly loved the look of the landscape and made much better time and was in a much more positive mood.  I camped a bit earlier than I had planned when I found an absolutely idyllic camping spot about 13 km north of Palojoensuu on a bluff overlooking the border river, surrounded by pine trees and out of earshot of the road.  It was by far the prettiest spot I had seen since I left Rovaniemi, and I needed the positive vibes of camping there.  I had a stiff left knee and both my Achilles tendons were sore; the persistent cold didn’t help my muscles and tendons get warmed up.

The highest road pass in Finland, outside Kilpisjarvi
July 23rd was the best day of cycling I had in Finland.  I woke up after 9 pm and then dawdled over breakfast, as I had bought some delicious smoked fish from the tourist shop just down the road.  I fixed small things on the bike that needed adjusting, washed some laundry and finally set off at the fashionably late hour of 12:30.  I moved slowly for the first 20 km to a road junction, where I bought ice cream and cookies to fuel my body.  Then the wind shifted to a brisk tailwind and the skies cleared, and I began to fly along.  The next 60 km went by quickly as the trees thinned out and barren fells got closer to the road as I climbed steadily.  It was distinctly chilly at the top of the 550 metre high pass that separated me from Kilpisjarvi, and I dropped to the lakeshore in bitterly cold headwinds.  It took me forever to crawl the last 5 km to the campground with my legs feeling empty and heavy.  I had a sauna to warm up, cooked dinner and was in bed at 1 am, with the sky still pretty light.

Lovely flowers on the way up Saana Fell
Atop Saana Fell
I took the next day off from cycling, hoping to let my body and my motivation recharge.  Kilpisjarvi is the extreme northwest corner of Finland, and is a major tourist centre.  I paid 10 euros for a massive breakfast buffet (I made sure I got my money’s worth), lazed around using the campground’s wi-fi and reading as I waited for the morning’s fog to break.  Finally at 12:30 the sun came out and I hiked up Saana Fell (1100 m above sea level), one of the barren fells towering over the lake.  Finland doesn’t have the big peaks that Norway and Sweden have, so these are among the higher peaks in the country.  There were lots of hikers on the trail, and the scenery was wonderful, with expansive views to Sweden’s mountains to the south and to endless fells to the north.  The tree line was about 200 metres above the lake, so most of the hike was across treeless terrain.  The woods were full of birds that were hard to see and identify, although a passing birder told me that they were bramblings.  I strolled back down to the campsite, rode into town to buy groceries and change my euros into Norwegian kronor, then went back to the campsite to sauna, read and cook up a big meal of steak and veggies in the campground kitchen.

The view towards Sweden from Saana Fell
In the campground car park, Kilpisjarvi
Pointy peaks in northern Norway
My first Norwegian fjord
Lovely Norwegian scenery
July 25th was my last day in Finland.  I cooked up a small mountain of pancakes in the kitchen while outside the weather continued cold, grey and bleak.  Eventually I could delay no longer and saddled up to climb over the low pass into Norway.  The scenery was pretty, although the tops of the fells were shrouded in clouds.  On the downhill to the Norwegian coast, I passed a series of very pretty waterfalls and the previously spindly birch trees got bigger and bigger.  I was on a newly paved road and I made good time despite the cold and the wet pavement.  I reached the shore of the fjord (Storfjorden), turned left, picked up a tailwind and raced along through very pretty scenery, with sunshine lighting up the waves on the fjord and the peaks of the mountains.  I stopped for a late lunch at a camper parking lot and had to shelter behind a camper to eat as the wind was gusting at about 80 km/h.  I climbed over a 90-metre-high pass between one fjord and the next, flew downhill and took an old sideroad along the shore looking for a good place to camp.  There were too many farms and summer cottages to camp along the shore, so eventually I turned inland along the main road and found a lovely spot to camp, well off the road in a mossy clearing.  I was glad that I had better weather and nicer scenery than I had had in Lappland.

On the way into Tromso
The next day was a great day for cycling and sightseeing.  I woke up at 7 (Norway is an hour behind Finland), left at 9 and was in the city of Tromso by 11:30.  Tromso is a big town (70,000 inhabitants) in an absolutely amazing setting, surrounded by mountains and fjords and beauty.  I rode across a high bridge with a very narrow bike and pedestrian shared lane that was almost impossible to navigate because of the number of elderly Italian cruise ship passengers clogging the lane.  I headed first to the Polar Museum where I learned about Amundssen and Nansen and other figures of the 19th century and early 20th century exploration of the Arctic, most of whom passed through Tromso.  I lazed outside in the sunshine, out of the wind, using their wi-fi and then bought some groceries. 
The Ice Cathedral in Tromso, looking like Sydney Opera House
As I ate lunch in a small park, I had to fight off the depredations of big seagulls who were utterly fearless in their attempts to eat my sandwich.  The climb out of town was steep and led across the island to another steep bridge leading to the large island of Langoya.  The light on the water and on the snowy peaks was magical, and I climbed steeply over lovely interior moorland down to Kattfjord, eyeing up some juicy-looking ski touring possibilities.  I cruised along the fjord, through my first road tunnel (the bane of Norwegian cycling touring!) to Bremshomen ferry dock, where I had to wait only 15 minutes for a boat to the next big island, Senja, where I found a great spot to camp beside a stream. 

Typical interisland bridge, Norway
Typical tiny fishing village
Beautiful scenery on the outside coast of Senja
The next day’s riding didn’t start until after 12:00, as it poured rain from 3 am until then.  I stayed in my tent reading and eating breakfast, and then had a bit of time pressure to make the 7 pm ferry on the other side of Senja.  The riding was through brilliant scenery all day, with dramatic granite sea cliffs, picturesque fishing villages, wild moorland and a series of intimidating road tunnels.
Another ferry ride
Wild Norwegian scenery
The view from Andenes campground
Campground views, Andenes
The gale force winds were mostly at my back, although at times I had to crawl through headwinds to get into tunnels.  My face was painfully windburnt by the end of the day.  I had a brief lunch stop of peanut butter on rye bread, then kept riding.  I took a brand new tunnel and equally new bridge to the ferry port at Gryllefjord; the bridge was resonating in the wind with an eerie, echoing “song” that alarmed me as I rode over it.  I made it to the ferry with 40 minutes to spare, bought groceries and scarfed down food as I waited.  I met my first-ever Chinese bicycle tourists outside China, a couple on some neat folding bikes with a good pannier system.  We communicated in my terrible Chinese, as they spoke essentially no English.  I was impressed by their fearlessness in setting off with essentially no ability to communicate with people.  The ferry crossing was beautiful, with striking light on the shore, on distant mountains and on the rolling sea.  On the other side, in the city of Andenes, I broke down and stayed in a commercial campground so that I could enjoy the perfect location on the outer shore of the island.  It was a very pretty spot on grass-covered sand dunes, looking out to the open North Sea.

Midnight sun over Norway
More late-night light
I had hoped to make an earlier-than-usual getaway the next morning, but instead I was awakened by torrential rain in the night.  I woke up at a decent hour but instead of rushing off on the bicycle, I went for a swim in the chilly ocean, shaved, trued my back wheel, had a leisurely breakfast and finally rolled off at 11:30.  All day long as I rode along the outer coast of the island of Andoya, headwinds slowed my progress to a crawl.  I listened to podcasts, hoping to get some sort of mental inspiration, but the scenery faded from the sculpted peaks of the past few days to humdrum undulations.  After 30 km of battling the wind, I had lunch on a windy white sand beach that apparently is an up and coming surfing spot.  Nobody was out in the howling gale that day, but it was still pretty.  There were more and more people living on the land as I headed south, but almost no surface water to be had, a complete contrast to the gushing waterfalls of a few days previously.  When I got to the town of Sortland, I still couldn’t for the life of me find a place to camp wild.  I pushed on and on, through densely packed farms, and finally, 10 km south of Sortland, where the busy road went over a small hill, I found an abandoned field and camped in the long grass, tired and jaded after 118 km that had been tougher than they should have been.
Surfing beach on Andoya

July 30th was a better day of cycling.  I was up and on the road in less than 90 minutes (about an hour less than usual) and raced into Stokmarnes with a brisk tailwind at 20 km/h.  I had a hot dog, checked e-mail, went to the post office to mail postcards, did some shopping and was out of town again before noon.  I made great time to the ferry terminal at Malbu, but missed a ferry by 20 minutes and had over an hour to wait for the next one.  This was my penultimate ferry, crossing to the Lofoten Islands, about which I had heard so much.  As I waited, munching sandwiches, I talked to a Norwegian family (mom, dad and two teenage kids) on a two-week cycling trip, and to Joris, a Dutch motorcyclist.  The ferry ride to the Lofoten islands was quick, and as the islands approached, I could see a number of appealingly pointy peaks rising up.  I disembarked in Fiskebol and rode through very pretty, wild scenery, with expanses of bare granite, little inlets and steep peaks still streaked with last winter’s snow. 
Lofoten scenery
The capital city, Svolvaer, left me cold, a functional expanse of concrete buildings with a surprising number of African migrants on the streets.  I pushed on through suburbia, looking in vain for a place to camp.  For an island out in the North Atlantic above the Arctic Circle, Lofoten is surprisingly densely populated!  I finally pitched my tent in a commercial campground in Kabelvag, cooked up a slap-up meal in their fancy kitchen and slept for a long time, listening to rain come down on the tent.

The next morning it was pouring rain so I had breakfast in my tent and lay there sipping tea and reading until 1:30 when the rain finally let up.  I got up, made myself lunch and rolled out at the ridiculously late hour of 3:30. I still managed to ride 46 km under leaden, cold skies along roads surprisingly choked with traffic.  I was relieved to make it across the inter-island bridge onto Vestvagoy and turn off onto a back road to lose the vehicular traffic.  It looked pretty (although cold) as I gazed back over the water towards the fishing village of Henningsvaer, alone on its long peninsula.  I was glad to see more open space and a wilder shoreline, but it just got colder and colder as I rode along, so I was relieved to find another commercial campground at Kongsjorda, ate a lot of pasta and a nice piece of chocolate cake for dessert.  I was pretty chilled, and my cheap sleeping bag didn’t do a great job of warming me up in the night.  I woke up with a distinctly stiff lower back.

Headed toward Moskenes
Inland lake near Moskenes
The next day was the last day of July, and the last real day of cycling of the trip.  I set off by 10:20, surprised not to wake up to rain, and rode 15 km to the town of Leknes.  I bought groceries, ten sheltered on a church porch to wait out another rain squall and eat some peanut butter sandwiches.  When the rain stopped, I rode on towards the western end of the Lofoten archipelago, and the traffic finally began to lessen a bit.  I rode through a long, dark interisland tunnel, then over another bridge after a spectacularly scenic ride along a pretty fjord.  I pushed along the inland coast of the island, along old roads around the new road tunnels, under steep granite cliffs.  I rode through the intricate harbour shared by Ramnoy, Kvalvik and Reine and, by 6:30 I was setting up my tent in my favourite campground of the trip at Moskenes, a huge expanse of grass and hills with lots of secluded spots to camp.  I feasted on smoked salmon (bought in Kvalvik) and rehydrated some fish soup, talked to Terri on Viber and then retired to my tent, cold and tired.  I was getting tired of never being warm, and my back was getting stiffer by the day.

Harbour in A
I had one day off the bike in Moskenes the next day.  I replaced my worn-out bike chain, rode to A (the absolute end of the road for the Lofoten islands) past racks of drying cod heads (Lofoten’s economy runs on dried cod—stokfisk—and has done so for centuries; the fish heads are apparently shipped to Nigeria to be turned into pungent fish sauce) to the renowned stokfisk museum, which was unexpectedly closed.  I biked back, noticing that my gear cable housing had split and broken, making it impossible to shift gears accurately; I didn’t have any spare cable housing, so I was going to need to find a bike shop in Bodo.
Fish heads drying in A, ready to be sent to Nigeria

The next morning I was in line for the ferry by 7 am.  It took almost 4 hours to get to Bodo, a modern city even bigger than Tromso.  I got off the ferry in (inevitably) drizzle, and headed to the airport to find out the rules for bringing bicycles on the flight.  I stayed there for a while, enjoying the warmth and dryness, listening to a live jazz band and using the free airport wi-fi.  Eventually I couldn’t put it off any longer, got onto my bike and rode out through the drizzle to the municipal campground.  I put up my tent, chatted to some Swiss university students who were carving soapstone statues out in the rain, ate sandwiches and then got to bed early for a long, rain-disturbed night.

August 3rd began with yet more rain.  It was the coldest, rainiest summer in Finland since 1962, and apparently Norway had had a similarly miserable summer.  My back, tired of being cold and tired of sleeping on a cheap, cold mattress, was even more sore than it had been, and now my left hip and thigh were distinctly sore, making cycling a miserable experience.  As it turned out, it was the start of two and a half months of piriformis syndrome, a sciatica-like condition that blighted my life and made it hard to walk or cycle or do any sort of exercise.  Only now, after going to a really top-notch physiotherapist, am I finally improving, just in time for my upcoming trip to Antarctica and South America.  I went to the local bike shop to get my gear cable housing fixed and to get a bike box for the flight, then went to the expensive hotel that I had treated myself to for the last night.  I packed up the bike, went out for a kebab at a take-out joint run by an Iranian guy, and then got to bed early, sad that my bike trip was over but glad to be escaping from a solid month of cold, rain and grey skies.

I flew out the next morning, August 4th, to Geneva, glad to have had 10 days of cycling, happy to have seen the spectacular coastal scenery of Norway and ready for the next stage of my farewell tour of Europe. 

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Down the Danube on a Bicycle, June 2015: Part Three--The Balkans


Stage Four—Yugoslavian Yin and Yang
Once across the Hungarian-Croatian border on Monday, June 22nd, where we saw our first border formalities of the trip (Croatia is in the EU but not in the Schengen Zone) we had a few kilometres of unpleasant cycling, along a narrow road with no real shoulder or bike path and some fast-moving trucks.  
Welcome to Croatia!
One of them actually ran Terri right off the road, much to her annoyance.  Luckily our bike path turned left away from the main road soon enough and onto the quiet road we would follow the rest of the day.  The scenery was fairly similar to Hungary:  a flat agricultural plain bordering the river, with small farms and a smattering of vineyards.  Our first village, though, showed that we had crossed a border, as it was half-deserted and partly in ruins, with little economic activity evident.  Banks and ATMs were nowhere to be found, and the only shops we found were tiny mom-and-pop corner grocery stores outside which men gathered to drink beer.  It turned out that we had arrived on a national holiday, which went some way to explaining the somnolence, but this is also the poorest corner of Croatia, still scarred by the 1991-95 war.  We had our biggest luggage-carrying climb of the trip to date, pedalling 100 metres uphill over a bend in the river, past more prosperous-looking country houses set amidst apricot orchards and vineyards.  We had pizza in a slightly larger town after 60 km which finally had an ATM, and then continued another 25 km to a tiny village called Kopacevo.  As had been the case all day, it was a mostly Hungarian-speaking village, thanks to the 1920 Treaty of Trianon that sliced away huge chunks of Hungary to give to the new state of Yugoslavia.  We found an almost-deserted campground with a gargantuan kitchen for our use, and cooked up some ravioli to accompany our bottle of Schwabenblut.
The next morning was Terri’s birthday, so I got up early to raid the grocery store for a special breakfast of pancakes in the kitchen.  After that we soon rode into the large provincial capital of Osijek, a sprawling metropolis after the tiny villages of the previous day.  We didn’t pause long, heading out of town on a busy road until we finally were directed onto a less-trafficked parallel road.  At lunchtime we found ourselves in Vukovar, a town still deeply scarred by the 1991-95 war, with its water tower still bearing the marks of the pounding it took from Yugoslav forces.  
Vukovar's emblematic water tower, a war memorial
Looking for a place to eat, we discovered that while there were cafes and bars everywhere, it was almost impossible to find a restaurant serving food.  Eventually we were directed to a lovely spot beside the Danube, where we waited out a passing rainstorm.  After lunch it was a pleasant afternoon of riding through a series of small wine-producing villages, each one down a small, steep incline from the plateau on which we spent most of our time.  Luckily we had fairly strong tailwinds to propel us on our way.  By 5 o’clock we were at the end of the road in Croatia, the border town of Ilok.  
Our view over the Danube from our luxury flat
We splurged on a fancy tourist apartment overlooking the Danube owned by a family who had fled Vukovar from 1991 to 1998 because of the war.  Taking advantage of having a well-equipped kitchen, I cooked up a birthday steak dinner for Terri washed down by some excellent local Slavonian wine.
The chef is in the house!
After only two days in Croatia, we crossed into Serbia the next morning over an imposing bridge.  It was spitting rain as we went through border formalities, and it continued to rain off and on all day.  By the time we reached Novi Sad and had a late lunch, the rain had strengthened into a miserable downpour.  Since the ride into Belgrade from Novi Sad was supposed to be not much fun anyway, we decided on the spur of the moment to take advantage of the rain and take our bikes on the train straight to Belgrade.  It took forever to find the train station, and more time to figure out what platform to get on, but by 6:30 pm we were on the train using Terri’s iPhone to find a place to stay in Belgrade.  We had a long and typically Balkan conversation with a middle-aged Serbian man named Dragan.  He was well-educated and clever, but consumed by a sadness at the tragic history of his country.  He had fought in the war against Croatia and was keen to set us straight about the Serbs being the good guys in the war.  He held up Serbia as the bulwark against the Ottomans, sacrificing their own freedom to save the rest of the continent from the Turks.  It was interesting to talk to him, but his deep-seated blind nationalism was all too drearily familiar to me from my previous trip through the former Yugoslavia.  By 8:30 we were pushing our bicycles through the darkening streets to the ridiculously ornate Baroque furnishings of the apartment we had rented.
Kalemegdan fortress, Belgrade
We had a proper day off in Belgrade the next day, exploring the city on foot and absorbing some of the cultural energy that pulses through the streets.  Our first port of call was the Kalemegdan, the massive fortress at the junction of the Danube and Sava rivers that has been fought over for centuries.  
Transformer statue, central Belgrade
On the way we passed the pedestrian streets of the city centre, decorated by huge Transformer statues made from car parts and featuring more ice cream stands per block than even Italy.  The fortress itself was impressive, with expansive views to the north over the flat Hungarian-speaking plains of Vojvodina and to the west over the sprawling Soviet-era suburbs of the city.  The military museum inside the fortress was left unvisited, although Terri relived her days in military intelligence by identifying some of the tanks parked outside.  We then wandered back through the pedestrian streets of downtown, enjoying the relaxed atmosphere of a capital city in summer.  We had a great lunch at a local joint recommended by our landlady, then hit the grocery store across the street from our flat to restock our panniers and cook up another feast in the kitchen before collapsing in bed early in our aircraft-carrier-sized bed.
Refreshed by our day out of the saddle, we left Belgrade the next morning after an epic 30-minute tussle with the lock that kept our bicycles safe in the depths of the subterranean cellars of the building.  It was raining, and we were glad for frequent EV6 signs that swept us neatly out of town and over the Danube to the left bank.  After crossing our bridge on a dedicated bike lane, we were directed down a muddy track through the grass to another quiet dike-top path that got us away from the heavy truck traffic of the main road.  As we rode along, we passed a surprisingly beautiful landscape beside the river, with quiet marshy backwaters teeming with ducks and other birdlife.  We pushed along, past old grim factory towns to a radler stop in a little pizzeria, and then continued along a busyish road to a small ethnically Hungarian town, Skorenovac (Szekelykeres in Hungarian), where we came across a piece of Serbian history during a late lunch:  a restaurant owned by the family of Zoltan Dani, an officer in the Serbian army who managed to shoot down an American F-117 Stealth fighter in 1999 during the NATO air war against Serbia arising from the Kosovo conflict.  Posters of two different movies connected to the incident adorned the walls.  Afterwards we tossed in the towel a bit early from an uninspiring ride and took a room in a small, unpretentious restaurant with hotel rooms in the back.  The rain had finally fled, and we eschewed the restaurant in favour of a takeout roast chicken, fruit and beer from the market stalls across the road.

Stage Five—Through Romania’s Iron Gates
We rode under brilliant blue skies through a peaceful, bucolic countryside the next morning east towards the Serbian resort town of Bela Crkva.  It was easy riding, although we had small undulations as the road veered inland from the Danube.  Bela Crkva was a town with a pretty setting around a series of small lakes.  There was some sort of festival in town, with lots of girls dressed in traditional costumes and others incongruously wearing cheerleader outfits and twirling batons.  A look at the various churches in town told a story of the various ethnic and religious strands woven through the area:   a Catholic church for the Hungarians and Croatians, a Romanian orthodox church, a Serbian orthodox church and even a Russian orthodox church. We stopped in a café for our daily radler and fries, changed money, met our second French couple on a tandem in as many days, and then pedalled off towards the Romanian frontier.  This involved a bigger hill climb than we were used to, as the road headed up and over into the valley of another tributary of the Danube.  By the time we had freewheeled down to the bridge at the border, we had built up quite an appetite.  Luckily a little restaurant stood just on the Romanian side and we tucked into a hearty and well-earned lunch featuring the local specialty of tripe soup, which was a lot tastier than it sounds! 
We had another climb in front of us, 300 vertical metres uphill to cut a series of meanders in the river and get back to the Danube proper.  Although it was pretty warm and Terri was a bit apprehensive about our first sizeable climb of the trip, it was relatively straightforward (especially fuelled by lunch).  
At the top of the first big climb of the trip, Romania
At the top we read that we had entered the Iron Gates National Park, and we descended for 10 km to the valley of the Danube through a lovely wild forest.  All along the left bank of the river the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains rose up to inviting-looking forests.  We had planned to find some wild camping that evening, but as it got later, we still hadn’t seen any likely-looking spots amidst the farm fields.  We passed through the scruffy-looking town of Moldova Veche, a vision of post-Soviet apocalyptica, and found a surprisingly nice hotel for 70 lev (about 18 euros).  We sat out in the café over good beer and dreadful red wine, eating very meaty stews while a local crowd of single young men got louder and louder as the beer bottles piled up on their table. 
The next day was definitely the scenic highlight of the entire trip.  Our route led along the Danube through the canyon known as the Iron Gates, where the Danube forces its way through the barrier of the Carpathians.  Not far from where we had stayed, the farmland ceased and we rode through a landscape of forests and fishing spots, full of perfect camping spots.  There were Romanian fishermen camped in almost all of these spots, but I’m sure we could have found one to ourselves.  There were towns marked on our map, but these were ghost towns, abandoned Communist concrete monstrosities from the Ceausescu era.  It meant that we had few restaurant options for lunch, and even had problems finding a radler, although a tiny little café eventually came to our rescue.  As dismal as the towns were, the scenery was magnificent, with steep-sided mountain slopes cloaked in dense forests tumbling right down to the river.  The road on the Romanian side was almost deserted, as truck traffic was banned through the heart of the gorges, and surprisingly flat given the terrain.  Looking across the river, the road on the Serbian side looked far less inviting for cycling, with heavy traffic and an endless series of tunnels.  On our side, despite a landslide that had almost blocked the road in one spot, the pavement was in good shape and perfect for riding, as well as being blessedly tunnel-free.
Iron Gates scenery
The Iron Gates are redolent of history, and our first taste of it was a strange-looking structure on the Serbian shore that proved, upon inspection through binoculars, to be a large excavated Bronze Age settlement under a protective roof.  Soon afterwards the swiftly flowing waters started to pool in the huge hydroelectric reservoir of the Iron Gates Dam, and we passed the half-submerged towers of a medieval castle.  Somewhere else along this stretch, Patrick Leigh Fermor (in the course of his epic walk across Europe in 1934) visited a completely Turkish village on an island in the middle of the Danube that has vanished completely below the waterline.  I watched for protruding ruins, perhaps a drowned minaret, but didn’t see anything.  In Roman times, this was where the marauding legions of the Roman Empire crossed north into Dacia to subdue the troublesome tribes on the other side of the Danube.  Although the Romans were in Dacia for less than 100 years, modern Romanian historic mythologizing ascribes a founding role to these soldiers.
We looked for wild camping spots as the day wore on, but instead we were diverted by a vision of beauty.  After a stiff climb up to another half-abandoned industrial wasteland of a town (Dubova), we spotted a sign for an upcoming nearby pensiunea and decided to call it a day.  When we arrived, it looked far too grand for the likes of us, a vision of four-star luxury with BMWs parked outside.  The owners were amenable to negotiating down their 100 euro rack rate, and for a hair under 50 euros, Terri decided to treat us both to a night of luxury.  We swam in the pool, sat sipping red wine (much less awful than the previous evening’s plonk) and absorbed the grand views.  The hotel was located on a wide stretch of the reservoir between two gorges, and we looked across at towering limestone cliffs that lit up as the sun crept towards the horizon.  It was a perfect setting, in the most impressive scenery of the entire day, and we slept the sleep of the dead in our huge king-sized bed.
The next morning we found that after the low traffic and non-existent population of the previous day, we had re-entered modern Romania.  
Terri with Decebalus, Romania
We cycled past dozens of new pensiuneas clustered along the water’s edge, then past the huge sculpted head of the Dacian king Decebalus carved into the cliffs beside the road in the late 1990s by a Romanian business tycoon, Iosif Constantin Dragan.  It was a pretty spot for photos, but it was also another instalment in the myth-making that characterizes so much history in eastern Europe.  We climbed up, up, up away from the hotels and weekend cottages that surround the town of Eselnita, and then descended into the larger city of Orsova where we picked up all the heavy truck and bus traffic that had been diverted around the gorge.  It was an unpleasant 20-km stretch along the river past the dam itself and into the city of Drobeta-Turnu Severin.  
Camping on a grassland that once was a collective farm
Here we stopped to recover from the head-down survival riding over perhaps the slowest lunch of the trip, with an old-school waitress prone to disappearing for half an hour at a stretch.  We followed quieter roads out of town along the river and ended up camping wild in an abandoned collective farm that has returned to nature.  There we gorged ourselves on the most delicious peaches we had ever eaten, plucked lovingly by old man from his own garden and sat watching the sun set the savannah alight in a scene oddly reminiscent of East Africa.
Southwestern Romanian countryside
Our last day in Romania ended up being the longest day of the entire trip, the only time we went over 100 km for the day.  We awoke in our abandoned farm field and spent much of the day rolling through tiny villages where horse carts outnumbered cars, on roads that varied from perfect new EU-funded asphalt to rutted cart tracks across the fields. 
The bit of the road that wasn't paved
We kept almost exact pace with the local beer delivery truck, passing them as they unloaded crates at cafes and shops, and then being passed halfway to the next village with friendly waves from the delivery guys.  We eventually popped out on a main road and had a fairly terrifying 10 km of dodging speeding trucks before the traffic calmed down and we approached the last border of the trip.  We had planned to sleep one last night on the Romanian side of the river, but Terri decided we could do another 10 km to get us across the new bridge and into Bulgaria.  
Sunflowers, southwest Romania
As we trundled along a back road into town from the bridge, my rear hub, which had made strange sounds earlier in the day, suddenly seized up and made a very unpromising and very loud crunch.  I realized that I had broken a bearing, and that the wheel was going to have to be rebuilt.  We made it another kilometre to the first truck stop we could find and took a surprisingly nice room.  I demolished a huge plate of the local specialty, satch (a giant meat and veg stirfry), but Terri, normally ravenous after a long day in the saddle, barely touched hers. 
Stage Six:  Bulgarian Beauty
It was the start of 24 hours of severe intestinal distress for Terri; luckily we were already planning to take the day off to get my wheel fixed, so she could have a bit of rest.  We got a lift into the Soviet-era concrete of downtown Vidin and, with the help of our driver, a local guy who had lived for 20 years in Italy and with whom I spoke in my pidgin Italian, we located a bicycle repair specialist whose shop was in his garden shed.  He took a look at my wheel, told me to follow him on one of his bikes and took me to a bike shop to buy a new hub (for all of 12 euros).  Then he told us to come back in an hour and a half and set to work stripping the spokes and rim off the old, destroyed hub and rebuilding the wheel on the new hub.  Terri found a hairdresser and had a haircut, pedicure and scalp massage while I wandered the streets eating.  The bike mechanic was done the wheel by the time we got back; he reminded me of similar gifted mechanics who had fixed my bikes over the years in places like Tbilisi and Baku and Sochi.  Armed with the new wheel, we caught a cab back to the hotel where Terri went back to bed feeling very unwell.
At this point, wondering what to do next, I got a message from a former student, Victor, who lived in the area.  When he heard that Terri was ill and that we were kicking around in Vidin, he hopped into his truck and drove us the 20 km out to the commercial farm that he runs in the village of Tsar Petrovo.  
Teachers-student reunion with Victor
He installed us in his guest cottage and we sat outside drinking good local wine, eating a great meal that his housekeeper had prepared and hearing about how a 21-year-old who had failed out of university through sheer apathy had been transformed into a keen farmer who had won the Bulgarian Farmer of the Year award the year before.  It was great to see a young man who had found his passion in life and become so successful.
We spent the next day touring around the farm with Victor, playing with the drone that he uses to survey his fields, checking out the irrigation system, riding in combine harvesters (one of Terri’s life-long dreams) and racing around on a quad bike.  
Flying drones on the farm
It was a wonderful day, and we finished with another great meal and more stories from Victor.  It’s always a welcome development in a long trip when for a little while you cease being a tourist and fit into the life of someone who lives in the country, and see the country in a completely different way.  
Storks following the combine harvester
Through Victor we learned a lot about the poverty and unemployment that blight this corner of Bulgaria; about corruption and gangsters; about trying to get his workforce out of their Communist-era apathy; about how cheap land and houses were around Tsar Petrovo; about the enormous depopulation of the villages. 
Seriously happy looking shotgun passenger!
The next morning Victor gave us a lift about 20 km out of town to shorten what promised to be a long day.  We waved goodbye on the side of the road, grateful for his hospitality and ready for the last three days of our ride.  That day proved to be a long one, both in terms of distance (93 km) and in terms of time.  Terri found it challenging, as it was by far the hilliest day we’d had so far, climbing away from the Danube and then undulating from valley to plateau all day.  It wasn’t terribly hot, but it was still sweaty work climbing up the escarpments, and when we came into a village looking for a restaurant that wasn’t there and Terri saw the next climb rising in front of her, she almost lost it.  I quickly directed us off the road to a riverside meadow and we had a picnic and a swim which restored spirits.  The afternoon continued to be hilly, and we decided to look for a spot to camp wild, but could not find any running water.  
Northwest Bulgarian traffic
Eventually, nearing dusk, the road took a final dip and led us down, down, down into the city of Montana.  I parked Terri in a café where she wolfed down a plate of hot fries and quaffed a beer in no time flat while I cycled around looking for a hotel.  It took a while, but I found quite a nice little hotel for a decent price.  We went back to the café for a huge dinner, and then collapsed tired into bed to sleep deeply for over 10 hours.
The next morning I had to make time for a medical issue.  I had, it seemed, been bitten by a tick the day we camped on the abandoned farm in Romania, and an expanding bulls-eye target of red had been expanding around the bite day by day.  Concerned by the prospect of getting Lyme disease, I went to the pharmacist who suggested a few days of doxycycline and an injection of something mysterious whose identity I never really figured out.  I had to go across the street and pay a nurse to do the injection.  The total cost for the antibiotics, the vaccine and the injection was 3 euros, a definite bargain. 
Petrohan Pass, the highest point of the trip
Once that was out of the way, Terri found a taxi driver willing to drive her and her bike up to the top of the Petrohan Pass, the 1400-metre barrier between us and Sofia.  Her legs were tired after the previous day’s exertions, and she was still feeling a bit dicey after her illness, so she left the climbing to me.  I love climbing passes on bicycles, and I had a great time rolling up into the Balkan range, through a series of small villages and then up through a lovely hardwood forest.  I left town just before noon, and it took about four hours in total from Montana to the top of the pass, where I found Terri sitting in a snug little restaurant reading and eating a delectable stew.  It was noticeably cooler at the top, and we sat inside beside the fire as I had some stew as well, having built up a tremendous hunger since breakfast.  Eventually we both climbed onto our bikes and started rolling down the other side of the pass, looking for a place to camp, but instead we ended up staying at Andreev Khan, a lovely fake-old caravansarai  set in a big garden beside the road, with a series of fish ponds.  It was not very expensive (20 euros) and it was a very pretty setting to sit and sip wine and eat as dusk fell.  We slept very well again.  
Andreev Han
Now that we were over the pass, not much stood between us and Sofia, about 60 km away.  We rolled downhill, took a short climb over a secondary pass, and then coasted downhill most of the way into the city.  We had a pizza and sausage lunch in the city of XXXXXXX which marked the end of the downhill.  It was hot as we trundled across the flat valley floor and into the bustle of the capital.  By dumb luck we chose a route into and through the city that had bike lanes, and then climbed up towards the leafy suburb of XXXXXX where Victor’s father’s house was.  Victor’s brother Igor was going to be staying there that evening (his father was on the Black Sea coast) and we looked forward to another reunion with a former student.  As we got closer to where Google Maps said the house was, the streets got steeper and steeper and narrower and narrower and Terri ended up pushing her bike and voicing her displeasure at the steepness.  We couldn’t find the house and settled down to wait for Igor’s arrival, which was in about half an hour at the wheel of his father’s convertible.  It turned out that Google Maps, and most other city maps, don’t have the street’s location correct.  Maybe this is a security precaution, as the Gatsbyesque mansion that Igor led us to was once the personal home of Todor Zhivkov, the long-serving Communist boss of the country from 1954 to the downfall of Communism in 1989.
Olympian feast in Sofia with Xander and Igor
Our last two days on the road were spent in the lap of luxury, eating like kings in a couple of beautiful restaurants, swimming in the pool, packing our bicycles into boxes and swapping stories with Igor, now an engineering student in Sydney, and his friend Xander, with whom he had just finished a high-speed road trip around Bulgaria.  
Igor and I atop Vitosha
We went for a drive and hike up the Vitosha mountain range that rises directly behind the house, and after a month of lots of cycling and little walking, our legs were sore for several days afterwards.  Sofia seemed a world away from the grinding poverty of the northwest of the country, and made a fine spot to end our month-long cycling odyssey that had started in Vienna. 
Our oasis of luxury in Sofia

I was pleased with the route we took.  Although it was very flat most days, we had interesting historical, cultural and natural sights to look at, and the heat and winds gave us some challenge.  I particularly liked going back to Hungary, but the two countries that I think I would most want to explore further are Romania and Bulgaria.  They will have to wait for my return to Europe, and I don’t know when that will be.  As we took our flight from Sofia back to Geneva so that Terri could return to Leysin for the last summer term of her career, I was already looking forward to my trip to Scandinavia, due to start only 48 hours later.  No rest for the cycle tourist!!